Archives for the tag: plugin

This is a guest blog post from Gorka Puente, founder of Keinoby and maker of the Yoikee Creator and Share Attachments add-ons for Confluence.
When you first get started with a wiki, one of the biggest challenges is how to organize your spaces and pages so that everyone in the company will start contributing content. Organizations beginning with Confluence frequently wonder whether to organize their spaces by product or by team and how to make sure that each space has a consistent structure.
If

This is a guest blog post from Karthik Selvakumar, client services engineer at Zephyr, about extending AtlasBoard – Atlassian's open source wallboard app – to include test data from the Zephyr for JIRA test case management add-on for JIRA.
What is Atlasboard?
Atlasboard is a NodeJS app that allows you to create wallboards. Once you install Atlasboard, you can quickly generate a wallboard and set up dashboards, widgets, and jobs, and then run them. The basic AtlasBoard module gives you

This is a guest post from K15t Software, the makers of the Scroll PDF Exporter, Scroll Office, and many other add-ons for Confluence. Their latest add-on, Scroll Viewport, makes it easy to turn Confluence into a CMS capable of publishing all types of content on a website.
Since K15t was founded, we have built our entire company website in Confluence. Good idea? Maybe, maybe not – but we certainly learned a lot about Confluence theming. Over the years, we’ve discovered many of the

You might have read our recent series on asset management with JIRA. This guest blog post from Tuncay Senturk of Snapbytes describes how you can use the Inventory Plugin for JIRA to quickly and easily get started with asset management in JIRA. Tuncay Senturk is the creator of the JIRA Enhancer Plugin, Twitter Plugin for JIRA, Time to SLA Plugin for JIRA and Stateoscope add-ons for JIRA.
Why inventories?
The primary challenge of inventory management is simple: As organizations grow,

This is a guest post from Daniel Wester, co-founder of Wittified LLC. Check them out on the Atlassian Marketplace.
Administering JIRA, Confluence, Stash, or another Atlassian product can sometimes seem like a thankless job. As an admin you have a number of responsibilities: training new users, providing best practices, and continually evaluating add-ons and product upgrades to see if they will meet your organization's needs. That's on top of serving as the first line of support for people that run

The Atlassian Marketplace is proud to announce a new way to make it easier for Atlassian customers to find great add-ons – Atlassian Verified. Atlassian Verified is a certification program to call out developers on the Marketplace who meet standards of traction, reliability, and support.
In the Atlassian Marketplace, you will now see a checkmark next to commercial add-ons from developers whom Atlassian has verified.
Atlassian Verified developers have met Atlassian standards on:
Traction –